At what age does science start to feel like itโs off-limits for amateurs? Sarah Gobbs-Hill, education director at the Terry Lee Wells Nevada Discovery Museum, thinks it might be some time after college.
The idea that science can only be experienced or appreciated by professionals is a myth that is carefully busted for us when weโre kids and tacitly reinforced by the time we hit adulthoodโa double standard that Gobbs-Hill and others at the museum are looking to counteract with Social Science, the three-years-running, filled-to-capacity event series with a tagline that reads โAdults only, brain building fun.โ
โOne of the things Iโm really learning is that people like science,โ said Gobbs-Hill. โWe get a lot of young professionals who still care about life knowledge.โ
Past themes have included fermentation, drones, robots and DIY mini-computers. The topic for July is urban sustainabilityโa term that sidesteps the controversy that โgreenโ often steps in.
โI think sustainability is sort of the new rhetoric,โ said Gobbs-Hill. โAnd in some ways I donโt think sustainability has been as politicized as, say, โglobal climate changeโ or โgreen efforts.โโ
This monthโs dive into urban sustainability includes a vermicompost workshop from edible landscaper Jana Vanderhaar of Verdant Connections, a tiny 144-square-foot house built by ACE High School students; and a city reimagining activity led by Colin Robertson, communications and strategy director of the Cathexes design firmโs proposed West Second District development.
Other presenters from Sustainable Nevada, Polygrarian Institute and Urban Roots will be stationed around the museum for participants to visit with when theyโre not eating, drinking and listening to live music.
Although itโs easy to think of Social Science and this monthโs Urban Sustainability theme as stand-alone gatherings, a big piece of its identity comes from being a part of a larger whole.
Itโs one event in a series of events that the museum is counting on to reposition itself as a science center, instead of just a childrenโs museum. The hope is that Social Scienceโalong with other programs and exhibits like Science Distilled, Discovery After Dark, Inside Out, and Monsterfishโwill help to bolster the 12-and-over audience as well as the museumโs ability to stay on the edge of scientific issues.
โWe can move pretty fast since weโre a pretty small organization,โ said Gobbs-Hill. โSo if thereโs a new topic thatโs super emergent that people are really excited about, itโs easy for us to kind of dive in and learn more.โ
Julyโs Urban Sustainability theme is a part of a larger Arizona State University fellowship that includes big-name museums like the Franklin Institute, the Cal Academy of Sciences and the Museum of Science and Industry.
In that kind of company, the Wells Discovery Museum seems to be on track to make a ripple effect on multiple generationsโand not just the ones who walk in the door.
